On Thursday, the New York City Board of Health voted to ban the sale of sugary soft drinks larger than 16 ounces at restaurants. This is a move that has sparked intense debate between public health advocates and beverage industry lobbyists. When did sodas get so big in the first place?
Anticipatory Computing: Unlocking the Ultra-Human in All of Us
Futurist Thomas Frey: Wouldn’t it be great if you could turn on your television and it instantly knew what show you wanted to watch?
We all dream of an easier life, so what if we got into our car and it knew where we wanted to go, or turned on a radio and it played the perfect music, or pressed “call” on our phone and we would instantly be connected to the person we most wanted to talk to.
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Why Apple announces iPhone cost and availability when competitors don’t
It just makes sense to announce pricing and ship dates as soon as they’re known.
When Apple has a new product coming out, one of the nice things they do is tell you how much it will cost and when it will go on sale. Apple’s competitors only sometimes do and that is especially true in the phone industry.
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What will mobile phones look like in 2022?
Photo credit: eWallStreeter
What will phones look like in 10 years?
The mobile is pretty well-established in the near future. The iPhone 5 has been released and it is similar to every iPhone that has been released since 2007. That shows that our current mobile devices have been sitting on the same plateau for years.
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Growing number of Americans are opting out of the banking system
821,000 households opted out of the banking system from 2009 to 2011.
More Americans have limited or no interaction with banks in the aftermath of one of the worst recessions in history. Instead more people are relying on check cashers and payday lenders to manage their finances, according to a new federal report.
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Zeta Launcher turns alien technology into magnetic kids toys
The Zeta Launcher brings surprise and mystery to futuristic toy cars with magnetic propulsion.
Zeta Launcher is a toy that is safe and easy to use for ages 4+ that not only launches a small car using only permanent magnets (no batteries, no electricity nor springs), but also “vacuums” it up a small ramp, auto-adjusts it and locks it in place for re-launch.
Pebblebrook Toys (maker of the Zeta Launcher) is one of the featured exhibitors at the DaVinci Inventor Showcase, which takes place on Oct 13, 2012 at the Denver Merchandise Mart, so come and check out this along with an amazing selection of other unique inventions!
Recently, company founder Jeff Cook took time to answer a few questions about their magnetic propulsion mechanism, having a 3-man CAD team, and their Zeta Reticuli origins…
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If you want more jobs in America, you need more immigrants
Obama signs the JOBS Act
Poyan Rajamand faced a choice when he completed his degree from Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business in 2008. Would he look for work in the United States or relocate abroad? Rajamand explained in a report written by the Partnership for a New America Economy and the Partnership for New York City, that he and his fiancé arrived at their decision easil. They would move to Singapore, where obtaining a visa was simpler for high-skilled immigrants than here in the United States. In his new home, Rajamand has founded a startup called Barghest Partners that invests in new businesses.
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Vendor relationship management makes free customers more valuable that captive ones
The best way to fix the customer’s experience problems is from her side of the marketplace: the demand side.
“Put down the customer. Step away from the marketplace,” Craig Burton once said to a clueless marketing officer That also comes to mind when you hear about unwanted surveillance of customers rationalized for marketing purposes, or how Big Data lets a company know a customer better than she knows herself.
MindMeld app: First voice and video calling app that understands conversations in real-time
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NGGSBt0hkw&hd=1[/youtube]
The serial entrepreneur, Tim Tuttle, who co-founded web acceleration technology company Bang Networks and video search engine Truveo (acquired by AOL), has returned with his third startup, Expect Labs, which he co-founded with Moninder Jheeta (who built infrastructure for Truveo.) Expect Labs has announced its first product, an iPad app for simplified group conferencing called MindMeld that is built upon Expect’s core technology concept — anticipatory computing. Even as a demo, it is an impressive piece of technology that shows where the future of computing is headed. (video)
Infographic: Robots bring jobs back to the U.S.
Photo Credit: NYTimes
Tesla factory in Fremont, Calif.
Often blamed for the steep job losses in U.S. manufacturing is the rise of robotic automation in the manufacturing and packaging industry along with the rampant outsourcing of labor to cheaper workforces. But a real look at the facts and stats show that things just aren’t that cut and dry. (Infographic)
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Putting sidelined cash to work to help move the economic recovery
There are other ways to generate a return on capital—and help move the economic recovery.
Over the past 24 months It is well known that America’s largest companies have been stockpiling cash over at alarming rates. It has been estimated from $1.5 trillion to $2.8 trillion. And at first blush, who can blame them? With interest rates at historic lows, market volatility, political uncertainty, the European crisis, severe commodity price fluctuations, and other unpredictable market conditions, corporate brands and executives have been understandably inclined to sit on the sidelines.
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Coolant smugglers reap large profits
The Marcone company of St. Louis was implicated in a coolant smuggling scheme.
A trusted senior vice president of a century-old company from America’s heartland had been caught on a wiretap buying half a million dollars in smuggled merchandise, much of it from China. And now the chief executive of the company was on the witness stand trying to explain how the senior vice president did it.
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